DISCLAIMER: Data provided are provisional and as-is, intended for informational purposes only; we do not guarantee accuracy.
Data last updated: 2024-01-02 16:57:00.927254
⬇️ 2023-10-12 Damage
Data
⬇️ 2023-10-17 Damage
Data
⬇️ 2023-10-23 Damage
Data
The damage maps have two values: 0 and 1.
- 0 represents no detectable damage
- 1 represents likely damage in human settlements (cities, towns,
villages)
A map of total (aggregate) damage could be produced by simply adding the two maps together and finding pixels with a value of 1.
The damage maps have been clipped to the boundary of the Gaza Strip and have a 40 meter spatial resolution.
Note that these data are preliminary and unvalidated. However, our preliminary comparisons between these damage maps and available high-resolution satellite imagery and/or reported locations of artillery strikes suggest good agreement. As georeferenced damage data become available, we will work to quantitatively assess agreement between our damage maps and other datasets.
There are errors in this dataset where our algorithms either incorrectly identify likely damage (false positive) or fail to identify actual damage (false negative). We have begun removing known sites of false positives from our likely damage maps. This is an ongoing effort with every new likely damage map.
If you come across any location that you believe to be incorrect, please send us the site’s latitude-longitude on this form and we will investigate.
The images are readable in Geographic Information System software such as Quantum GIS or ArcGIS and most other online mapping platforms.
If you would like to access these data in a format other than
tif, such as kml, shapefile, or
geoJSON, let us know.
If you use these maps in your reporting, please include the following citation (hyperlinks embedded):
Source: Damage analysis of Copernicus Sentinel-1 satellite data by Corey Scher of CUNY Graduate Center and Jamon Van Den Hoek of Oregon State University.
… and please share with us links to any published versions of these maps.
Please do not distribute these files beyond your working group. We are setting up a public-facing website that will host damage maps for broader access.
The damage maps are based on a multi-date analysis of European Space Agency Copernicus Sentinel-1 data. We used a coherent change detection approach, which we presented in a June 2022 NASA ARSET training (Part 1) on mapping urban damage during armed conflict.